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Frictions blog.journal | Open Call for Contributions: Transatlantic Ruptures and Transformations

Contribute to the debates on the impact of the US disruptive foreign policy and the transformations it could engender in the international order and relations. We also welcome pieces offering historical reflections on phenomena inspired by the Trumpian turn. Frictions welcomes contributions in multiple formats. The editors will seek to publish ideas quickly, given the pressing nature of ongoing developments.

Submit a contribution here!

Frictions: Europe, America and Global Transformations is the Open Access blog/journal of the Leibniz ScienceCampus in Regensburg. The online publication aims to explore the historical and current dimensions of dis/connections between and within these regions. Given the current turbulence that is reshaping the global order, rupturing established transatlantic alliances and portending new forms of international and interregional relations, Frictions is issuing an open call for contributions.

We welcome contributions reflecting the transformations of the global, international and regional orders, while broadly addressing our key research themes:

  • In/security, sovereignty and transatlantic relations
  • Institutions, trade and supply chains
  • Cultural interactions and translations
  • Media systems, media discourses and technological change

We are open to pieces discussing the current disruptive, unpredictable role of the US in world politics today and its impact on other regions of the world. At the same time, we encourage reflections on other periods of regional and global upheaval that generated phenomena that are gaining resonance today such as Great Power politics, imperialism, colonialism and neo-colonialism, extractivism, treaties that ignore native populations, population transfers, and ethnic cleansing, as well as peace talks and peace treaties.

In the spirit of the central concept of the journal, Frictions, we look to explore the disruptive, destructive aspects of tensions and conflicts in parallel with the productive, (re)generative potential of frictions.

At the ScienceCampus, Europe and the Americas are understood broadly, covering those areas staking a claim to be the Global North or “West”, as well as those areas that form(ed) the historical “Second World” (or socialist bloc) and Global South. Seen through an area studies lens, these regions  cover spaces traditionally associated both with being centres of theory production and of empirical case studies, subjected to the gaze of those “centres”.

Contributions can take the form of longer, peer-reviewed essays or of shorter discussion pieces. As well as written texts, we can also publish in other formats, such as audio contributions, photo essays or video.

We welcome proposals via our contribution form.

Given the pressing nature of events, the editorial board will look to review, edit and publish contributions quickly, while encouraging dialogue between contributions.

Contact frictions@europeamerica.de with any queries.

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